Last updated on January 2, 2024.

One of the highlights of my visit to Athens was the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture, a private museum with collections covering Greek history from antiquity to 1922. 

Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Benaki Museum of Greek Culture

 

Visiting the Benaki Museum

The best time to visit the Benaki Museum is on a Thursday evening. Admission is free from 6pm until midnight. Otherwise, you pay a full admission of €12 or €8 for temporary exhibitions (as of July 2023). The museum, which is located in the Kolonaki neighborhood, is closed on Tuesdays.

Benaki Museum of Greek Culture

The Benaki Museum is easily one of the best museums in Greece. I was very impressed with the quality of the collection and the way the museum is organized.

Benaki Museum of Greek Culture

 

Greek Antiquities

I started my visit on the ground floor in the Greek antiquities section. It started out with the typical statues, vases, and funerary items, but especially interesting were the Fayum Portraits from Egypt. They were used to cover bodies prepared for mummification during Roman occupation of Egypt. Before heading upstairs, there were a number of Byzantine icons on display.

Antiquities Gallery
Antiquities Gallery at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Antiquities Gallery
Fayum portrait at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Fayum portrait

 

Ethnographic Section

Next was an ethnographic section of the museum. Several traditional Greek costumes from Greece, Cyprus, and Asia Minor were on display.

Traditional Cretan costumes at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Traditional Cretan costumes
Traditional dress from Pyrgi (left) and Kalamoti (right) in Chios at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Traditional dress from Pyrgi (left) and Kalamoti (right) in Chios
Traditional Cypriot costumes
Traditional dress from Samsun in Asia Minor at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Traditional dress from Samsun in Asia Minor

A room from a traditional Greek mansion in the town of Kozani in northern Greece concluded the exhibit.

Room from a mansion in Kozani at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Room from a mansion in Kozani

 

Paintings

Before checking out a temporary exhibition of serving trays, I viewed some paintings of Greece in the 19th century. It was incredible to see how small the city was just before Greece won its independence from the Ottoman Empire.

Painting of Athens in 1820 at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Painting of Athens in 1820
Decorative serving tray of Hagia Sophia at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Decorative serving tray of Hagia Sophia

 

Greek Revolution

Finally, I got to see several items from Greece’s war for independence and the period after the war. On display were items such as Lord Byron’s pistols, Bouboulina’s telescope, a flag belonging to Theodoros Kolokotronis, and a painting of the launching of the Greek Revolution at Agia Lavra.

Lord Byron’s pistols at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Lord Byron’s pistols
A flag belonging to Theodoros Kolokotronis at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
A flag belonging to Theodoros Kolokotronis
Painting of Agia Lavra

The rest of the gallery focused on post-war Greece and the new Greek kingdom. Traditional clothing worn by the royal family and chairs used at a reception for King Otto were among the items on display.

Traditional clothing used by the royal family
Chairs used at a reception for King Otto at the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture in Athens, Greece
Chairs used at a reception for King Otto

 

Map of Kolonaki with the Benaki Museum

Author

Owner of Paisadventure. World traveler. Chicago sports lover. Living in Colombia.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.